Welcome to Big Old Goofy World . . . a place where I can share my thoughts, hopes, and dreams about this rock that we live on and call home.

Monday, September 1, 2014

Samuel Gompers, Can We Talk?

On September 4, 1910, Samuel Gompers, the
first president of the American Federation of labor (AFL) wrote the following
in the New York Times: “Among all the
festive days of the year, of all the days commemorative of great epochs in the
world’s history, of all the days celebrated for one cause or another, there is
not one which stands so conspicuously for social advancement of the common
people as the first Monday in September of each recurring year—Labor Day.”According to Mr. Gompers Labor Day is the
only holiday that celebrates the common man (and woman, though not then)—not religion,
a war anniversary, or the birth or death of a famous person.I disagree.I think that Mr. Gompers and I need to talk.

Someone much smarter than me once said
that a person’s religion is those standards that give meaning and dictate the
way that one lives his or her life.It
is their purpose in life. This person argued this in saying that there were no
non-religious wars . . . that all wars were religious.Someone was always pushing one way of
believing and living onto someone else who did not care to give up the way that
he or she was already believing and living.Another person, again probably much smarter than I, stated that the one
true religion is economics . . . that all of life is dictated by economics . .
. all of life.Having now lived more
than a half-century I am seeing a whole lot of wisdom in that statement . . .
plus a whole lot of truth.Based on
that, I am not sure how Mr. Gompers came to the conclusion that Labor Day was
such a clean and pure holiday that celebrated nothing but the common worker.

First of all, what do you know about
Labor Day?

Did you know that Labor Day was a
result of labor unrest?In the late
1800s the labor movement was growing and beginning to have more and more
influence in national politics.On May
11th, 1894, a strike took place in Chicago by the employees of the
Pullman Palace Car Company to protest wage cuts and the firing of union
representatives.A month later there was
a call to boycott all Pullman railway cars that basically crippled all rail
transportation across the nation.In
typical government fashion, the federal government sent troops to Chicago to
break the strike.Well, when push comes
to shove the strikers pushed back . . . riots broke out and more than a dozen
workers were killed in all of the violence.

So, how does one make amends?The federal government, under Congress,
created Labor Day as a legal holiday to celebrate the social and economic achievements
of American workers and their contributions to the strength and prosperity of
the nation.It was Congress’ hope that
it could regain the support of the American workers.After all, a little gesture can go a long
ways in getting people back to work.What good is an economy when no one is working?The date? June 28th, 1894,
Congress designated the first Monday in September of each year to be a legal
holiday.

Despite the recognition of the
government and the establishment of a federal holiday, it would be nearly
twenty years later before a whole lot of respect was shown to the common
worker.It was not until 1916 that
workers were granted the eight-hour work day through the Adamson Act.This Act established an eight-hour work day
and additional pay for overtime.Prior
to that it was not uncommon for a laborer to work twelve-hour days for six days
a week. The movement towards a five-day
workweek started in 1908 when a spinning mill in New England started
accommodating its Jewish workers.The
Jewish workers had difficulty observing the Sabbath under the traditional
six-day work week.If they took Saturday
off and worked on Sunday they risked offending the Christian majority, but to
work on Saturday violated their own religious beliefs . . . so the owners went
to a five-day work week.

In 1926, Henry Ford jumped on the
bandwagon and started to close his factories over Saturday and Sunday to give
his workers a two-day weekend without reducing their pay.The first union to jump on board this movement
was the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America as it negotiated a five-day
work week for its members.The nation
ponied up to the five-day work week in 1938 when President Franklin D.
Roosevelt signed the Fair Labor Standards Act that established a five-day, 40-hour
work week for many laborers.It has been
said that it is at this point in history that the great American weekend was
born.It only took 40 years to get to
this point in was a wonderful gift and recognition of the common worker, until
1938 most laborers were still working a six-day week . . . so, at best the
holiday only gave them a two-day weekend, unlike out three-day weekend
celebration of Labor Day today.

According to U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics, as of May 2013, there are 155.7 million workers in the United
States over the age of 16.Many of them
won’t get the holiday that is set aside for them to celebrate because they will
have to work.A good chunk of the
workers in the United States are working in retail . . . approximately 4.3
million of them . . . who will not be off due to the fact that most retailers
are open for their big Labor Day sales.Kind of ironic isn’t it?

Looking over the history of the labor
movement and the establishment of a national holiday to honor labor, one could
argue that the actual holiday is set aside—though indirectly—to honor those
dozen or so people who were killed in the Pullman strike and riots in
Chicago.That would make it a holiday
for the death of someone.One would
argue whether or not it is a celebration or an appeasement when viewing a
history that has taken decades to bring fairness and justice to the labor
practices of industry . . . the eight hour work day . . . the history of the
five-day, 40 hour work week . . . child labor laws . . . payment for overtime .
. . health benefits . . . and on and on the list could go.The arguments are still there.And, why? Probably because such changes
effect the profit margin of industry . . . usually to the lower end.When this happens industry makes less
money.Money deals with economics.Economics is what makes the world spin
around.It is a religion in the minds
and hearts of many.

Very few of us who celebrate the big
three-day weekend of observing Labor Day on the first Monday of each September
actually know anything about the holiday.As much as Mr. Gompers wants to believe that it is a non-religious
holiday, I just cannot agree.I cannot
agree because the almighty dollar is the altar that many of us worship . . .
that gives us purpose and meaning . . . that dictates our lives . . . that gets
us out of bed every morning.The truth
of the matter is that we, as a nation, would not be where we are today in the
economic world if it were not for the dedication and hard work that was put in
by those who labor through the years . . . but, the question is: Who profits?It is not the common laborer.Someone has been getting rich off all of this
. . . and, it is not the common laborer.

As much as I would like to embrace the
mythology behind Labor Day, thanks to people like Mr. Samuel Gompers, I find it
difficult to jump on that bandwagon in ignorance.History that is based on facts, not wishful
thinking and mythology, usually paints a different story than the one that most
Americans embrace and celebrate . . . and this is true in other nations
too.I appreciate the gift of a
three-day weekend that Labor Day affords those of us able to actually take it
off and celebrate it; yet, at the same time I do not want to fool myself into
thinking that it is a pure and simple gesture of gratitude for all the hard
work of millions of laborers—past and present.For a great many, unbeknownst to them, it is a religious holiday . . . a
holiday of remembrance for those who gave their lives for equal rights and
justice . . . and, based on the fact that many retailers are open, an altar to
the almighty dollars that is making someone rich.

As usual, this is my rant . . . my
opinion.But, I ask you: how much do you
really know about Labor Day . . . about what you are celebrating?Labor Day is more than the unofficial end to
summer.What is it?Well, it depends on who you ask?Those who run the world’s economy will say
one thing, those who are doing all the work another, and those of us who are
celebrating it even another.Maybe we
need to sit down and talk . . . wouldn’t you agree, Mr. Gompers?Happy Labor Day everyone!